The Full Court Press

De: Nate Jackson & ChatGPT
  • Resumen

  • The Full Court Press is a fast-paced criminal law podcast hosted by defence lawyer Nate Jackson and co-hosted, unscripted and in real-time, by ChatGPT.

    After conducting "deep research" on a given case, ChatGPT engages with Nate in real time: Providing a quick, unscripted summary of recent appellate cases from the ONCA and SCC.

    The aim here is to keep criminal lawyers abreast of new appellate caselaw while testing the limits of AI language models along the way.

    *NB: This is a DIY pod that is mostly born out of curiousity and a desire to help colleagues stay up-to-date on the newest law. Be prepared: production value is a function of limited time and ... time. It is a work in progress.

    Enjoy!

    Nate Jackson
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Episodios
  • R. v. Chizanga, 2025 SCC 9 (Notebook LM Pod)
    Apr 9 2025

    🎙️This time on the Full Court Press we listen to an AI generated convo created by Google's "Notebook LM."

    It's not a dynamic, real-time interaction with an AI model but, rather, a (very realistic-sounding) "fake" conversation between two speakers generated after uploading the case into Notebook LM's large language model.

    I say "fake" conversation but then again: How do we define "fake". If it sounds like a duck, walks like a duck...

    Regardless, an interesting decision out of the SCC that we should be aware of and the corresponding judgment out of the ONCA. Jury charge case re. the admission and use of uncharged discreditable conduct.

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    13 m
  • No REP in EDR 🚗
    Apr 8 2025

    Case Overview: R. v. Attard, 2024 ONCA 616

    Court: Ontario Court of Appeal Date: August 16, 2024 Panel: Gillese, van Rensburg, and Roberts JJ.A.

    Facts:

    Wendel Attard was charged with dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing bodily harm after a serious crash in Brampton, Ontario. At trial, the Crown sought to admit data from the vehicle's Event Data Recorder (EDR), which logged details such as speed, throttle, and braking in the five seconds before impact. The data showed Attard was speeding—up to 130 km/h in an 80 km/h zone.

    Police had seized the car and extracted the EDR without a warrant or consent, relying on s. 489(2) of the Criminal Code.

    Trial Decision:

    The trial judge excluded the EDR evidence, finding:

    • The police lacked reasonable grounds under s. 489(2) to seize the vehicle.
    • Attard had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the EDR data, engaging s. 8 of the Charter.
    • Under s. 24(2), the exclusion of the evidence was necessary to uphold the integrity of the justice system.

    Attard was acquitted due to insufficient evidence of speed and acceleration without the EDR.

    Court of Appeal Ruling:

    The Court of Appeal allowed the Crown’s appeal, finding three key errors in the trial decision:

    1. The seizure was lawful: Officer Ball had reasonable grounds under s. 489(2)(c) based on witness accounts, dashcam footage, and the scene’s severity.
    2. No reasonable expectation of privacy in the EDR data once the vehicle was lawfully seized—echoing appellate decisions from B.C. (Fedan) and Saskatchewan (Major).
    3. The exclusion under s. 24(2) was an error. Given the legal uncertainty around EDR privacy at the time and the reliability and importance of the evidence, the data should have been admitted.

    Outcome:

    The acquittal was set aside. A new trial was ordered, with the EDR evidence to be admitted.

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    2 m
  • Searching Your Phone at the Border: 2024 ONCA 608
    Apr 8 2025

    The case is R. v. Pike, 2024 ONCA 608, decided by the Ontario Court of Appeal on August 9th, 2024.

    The core issue was whether section 99(1)(a) of the Customs Act—which lets border officers search digital devices without any objective grounds—violates section 8 of the Charter, which protects against unreasonable search and seizure.

    The Court held that the law is unconstitutional. They said searching digital devices—like phones and laptops—without at least reasonable suspicion is too intrusive to be justified by border security needs alone.

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    3 m

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